Tesla Roadster goes continent-hopping, expands markets to include Canada and Japan

Seems like reports of the Roadster’s demise were indeed exaggerated. Tesla has announced it’s bringing its iconic electric automobile to five new nations. Canada and Japan are accompanied by Hong Kong, Poland and Turkey in being able to now take deliveries of freshly charged Roadsters. Of course, sufficiently motivated buyers could have imported theirs by now, but it’s always good to have local support on an official basis and this does seem to signal a more ambitious outlook on the part of Tesla. Also included in the press release — yours to peruse after the break — is word that the company has shifted 1,200 Roadsters since inception. That might not be a lot but you have to start somewhere, let’s hope the next 1,200 don’t take nearly as long to hit the road.

Continue reading Tesla Roadster goes continent-hopping, expands markets to include Canada and Japan

Tesla Roadster goes continent-hopping, expands markets to include Canada and Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 04:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp intros first 100GB BDXL discs, Japan gets first dibs on July 30

It took a little while after the BDXL specification was finalized, but here’s Sharp busting down the door to expanded storage with the first official products adhering to said spec. The new VR-100BR1 discs will use triple-layer fairy dust to squish 100GB of data inside, and Akihabara News reports that they’ll be swiftly followed by quad-layer 128GB variants as well. Of course, every shiny new toy comes at a price, which in this case will be ¥5,000 per disc — that equates to $57 and makes us wonder why we wouldn’t just buy an external HDD with that cash. Perhaps because the slinky new Blu-ray media will be playable in that shiny new Sharp Blu-ray DVR you just bought? You did buy a Sharp DVR, right? Because the BD-HDW700/70 are the only models that will support these, at least for the moment.

Continue reading Sharp intros first 100GB BDXL discs, Japan gets first dibs on July 30

Sharp intros first 100GB BDXL discs, Japan gets first dibs on July 30 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Jul 2010 02:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DoCoMo’s glasses-free 3D LCD panel could make the 3DS look decidedly first-gen

DoCoMo's glasses-free 3D LCD panel could make the 3DS look decidedly first-gen

At E3 this past summer, we got our first taste of the Nintendo 3DS, and early impressions were good: compelling 3D effect sans glasses from its Sharp-sourced parallax barrier LCD. But, as soon as we moved the thing it became clear that the viewing angle on the effect is woefully slim. This is a problem DoCoMo is said to have at least reduced with its glasses-free LCD, relying on eight lenticular lenses to offer a 30 degree viewing angle — on the horizontal plane. Vertically you still have to be perfectly aligned, but the company hopes to remove that restriction before products based on this tech are released in the next year or two. It’s a bit early, but we’re already having flashbacks to young LCD manufacturers battling to deliver the widest viewing angles while maintaining full contrast. Hopefully that means in the not-too-distant future everyone will have 180-degree 3D LCDs — and they’ll all be dirt cheap, too.

DoCoMo’s glasses-free 3D LCD panel could make the 3DS look decidedly first-gen originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Jul 2010 08:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tec Hideoto portable cassette player time-travels from 1994, gets USB audio for its trouble

Of all the USB tape players we’ve seen in our day, this is certainly one of them! Available from a Japanese company called Tec, Hideoto is a Walkman-esque portable cassette player that features USB and stereo headphone outputs, powered by either the aforementioned Universal Serial Bus or two AA batteries. It also comes with Cassette Mate software for Windows, which presumably makes saving your audio to MP3, WAV, or WMA a figurative snap. Available next month in Japan for roughly $57, at which point we expect to see these pop up at our favorite import e-tailers here in the states. Get a closer look after the break.

Continue reading Tec Hideoto portable cassette player time-travels from 1994, gets USB audio for its trouble

Tec Hideoto portable cassette player time-travels from 1994, gets USB audio for its trouble originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jul 2010 14:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Onkyo netbook gets covered inside and out with Miffy

Onkyo netbook gets covered inside and out with Miffy

Miffy (or Nijntje) is a small, Dutch, female rabbit who appears in picture books. How exactly she became a cultural hit in Japan we don’t know, but we do have a good idea how she found herself plastered all over this netbook: some combination of Onkyo having a bunch of extra C4 units lying around and Namco-Bandai having a Miffy license it wasn’t fully utilizing. On the hardware side this thing is particularly disinteresting (1.6GHz Atom CPU, 1GB RAM, 160GB HDD, etc. etc.), but its lid has been liberally covered with character silhouettes. Its Windows installation (7 or XP) has received a similar treatment, with Miffy-themed apps and wallpaper ruling the desktop thanks to that partnership with Namco-Bandai. No word on price, but predictably this one is Japan-only.

Onkyo netbook gets covered inside and out with Miffy originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 11 Jul 2010 07:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Burger King uses ‘musical shower’ as latest trick to entice Japanese clientele

A new Burger King eatery opening up in Japan isn’t usually something we concern ourselves too much with, but this one comes with an interesting new twist. Those umbrella-aping translucent cones hanging over the tables are known as “musical showers,” and their function is to deliver music in an isolated fashion to you and your significant — but not too significant, it’s still BK, after all — other. All you’ll need to do is plug your portable media player into the provided receptacle and the tunes you know and love will literally shower down upon you. To be honest, if the audio channeling is sufficiently precise not to disturb nearby punters, we’re loving this idea. Now just give it a name that won’t make teenagers giggle and bring it westwards.

Burger King uses ‘musical shower’ as latest trick to entice Japanese clientele originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Jul 2010 07:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NTT DoCoMo looks to sell handheld game manufacturers on 3G

Japanese telecom operator NTT DoCoMo is apparently in talks with heretofore unnamed manufacturers to get its 3G modules embedded in handheld game consoles. “We are discussing this with various players,” said company president Ryuji Yamada. The Wall Street Journal makes an educated guess that Nintendo might be one of the “players” (or “ballers,” if you will), which sounds pretty good to us: we know that the upcoming Nintendo 3DS handheld is still being tweaked, and including 3G would be a pretty big deal. We can dream, right? Either that, or move to Mexico City and get a Zeebo (sure, it’s not a handheld, but whatever).

NTT DoCoMo looks to sell handheld game manufacturers on 3G originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Jul 2010 15:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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White PS3 Slim with 160GB HDD hits Japan July 29th, new 320GB HDD option

Looks like we’ve (almost) solved the mystery of PlayStation 3’s FCC-bound CECH-2501 models. Sony just announced a “classic white” PS3 Slim (as opposed to the “ceramic white” original) for Japan, model CECH-2500, coming July 29th with 160GB HDD. For 34,980 yen (about $400 translated to US currency) you can now start off with 320GB of storage in your “charcoal black” model — not to worry, the aforementioned 160GB still retails for 29,980 yen ($342). So, when are we gonna see this elsewhere in the world, hm?

Update: Post edited to make clear that the new “classic white” model is only available with a 160GB HDD.

White PS3 Slim with 160GB HDD hits Japan July 29th, new 320GB HDD option originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Jul 2010 00:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mongoose Studio’s dozen iPod cluster display is an expensive way to watch Tron (video)

Mongoose Studio's 12 iPhone cluster display is an expensive way to watch Tron (video)

Most of us would be happy to get a single video to play on our PMP without having to run it through some sort of transcoder first, but the folks at Mongoose Studio needed something more complex. They’ve released a video of a project that’s been in the works for some time, clustering 12 iPod touches into a sort of bezel-riffic widescreen display. All are controlled by a master, 13th iPod that can cause them to display a clock in the interest of verifying synchronization (which is far from perfect, as you’ll see in the embed below), or to trigger the playing of a movie. We’re guessing that the footage must be manually split into appropriate files for each device, and we’re also guessing that horrible things would happen should someone come along and re-shuffle them. But, if you have a lot of friends with iPhones and a lot of free time to prep the film, this could make for a rather interesting movie night — until someone gets a call, that is.

Continue reading Mongoose Studio’s dozen iPod cluster display is an expensive way to watch Tron (video)

Mongoose Studio’s dozen iPod cluster display is an expensive way to watch Tron (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Jul 2010 19:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Inventec phasing out Kohjinsha brand, opting for Onkyo instead

It may not matter to you Yanks, but for many regions of Asia, this news may just ruin some weekends. Okay, so maybe “ruin” is a stretch, but if you suddenly stop seeing a new flow of Kohjinsha gear at your local computer market, here’s why: owner Inventec is killing the brand. As the story goes, Inventec has decided to stop producing mini-laptops and the like using the Kohjinsha sub-brand, instead turning that team into a full-on R&D operation. When it comes to end-user products, the Onkyo brand will be applied; we’ve seen some pretty radical Onkyo PCs over the past few months, so here’s hoping this also means that more and more would-be Kohjinsha products will end up in North America. Fingers crossed, right?

Inventec phasing out Kohjinsha brand, opting for Onkyo instead originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 03 Jul 2010 09:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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